Nebraska
Nebraska Property Records: How to Find Out Who Owns a Property (2026)

Nebraska records deeds and other property instruments through the Register of Deeds office in each of its 93 counties. Most counties share a free online portal called Nebraska Deeds Online, though it does not cover every county, and a handful of rural offices still require a direct request.
Information last verified on 2026-07-16. This article has not yet been reviewed by a licensed lawyer.
How Property Records Work in Nebraska
Nebraska assigns responsibility for recording real property instruments, including deeds, deeds of trust, mortgages, plats, tax liens, and death certificates, to an elected Register of Deeds in each of its 93 counties. In the state's smallest counties, the position is combined with the County Clerk's office, so the department may be listed as "County Clerk/Register of Deeds" rather than as a stand-alone office; larger counties, such as Douglas County (Omaha) and Lancaster County (Lincoln), maintain fully independent Register of Deeds offices with their own staff and search systems.
Once a deed, mortgage, or other instrument is recorded, it becomes part of the public chain of title for that parcel and can be located through a grantor-grantee name index, the traditional way land records offices let researchers search by a person's name rather than by address. Most Nebraska counties, though not literally all 93, participate in a shared platform called Nebraska Deeds Online, built and hosted by MIPS Inc. under individual agreements with each county. On participating counties, the portal provides free instrument-level index information, including document type, recording date, grantor, grantee, and legal description, and free document images for most records scanned from February 1, 2005 forward, with some counties' scanned history extending further back.
Coverage is not universal. Nebraska Deeds Online publishes a map showing which counties actually participate, and a county that isn't shaded as active has to be searched directly through that county's own Register of Deeds, typically by phone, in person, or by mailed request. Before assuming a search on the shared portal is complete, confirm the specific county appears on the participation list.
How to Find Out Who Owns a Property in Nebraska
The fastest free path to an owner's name is the county assessor, not the Register of Deeds. The Nebraska Department of Revenue's Property Assessment Division hosts a statewide "County Assessors and Parcel Search" directory that links to each of the state's 93 county assessor sites, most of which allow a search by owner name, situs address, or parcel number with no account or fee required. Lancaster County, for example, runs its own Maps/GIS Services tool covering exactly this kind of lookup. Because a recent sale can appear in the Register of Deeds' index before the assessor's ownership field catches up, cross-checking both sources matters if the timing of a transfer is important.

For a deeper look, such as tracing prior owners or every mortgage and lien attached to a parcel, use Nebraska Deeds Online's grantor-grantee index on participating counties, or contact the county Register of Deeds directly where the portal doesn't cover that county. This is also the route for a certified copy of an actual recorded deed, which some lenders, title companies, and courts require rather than a plain printout. Nebraska sets the certified-copy fee by statute at $1.50 per page under Neb. Rev. Stat. Section 33-109, applied on top of the office's standard photocopy charge, and this figure holds consistently whether the request goes to Douglas County, Chase County, or any other Nebraska Register of Deeds. For a broader look at how recording offices are organized in other states, see Property Records by State.
Nebraska Deeds Online: A Shared Portal, Not a True Statewide System
Nebraska is a useful example of a middle path between a single unified state land-records system and 93 fully separate county systems. Nebraska Deeds Online is a shared-vendor product that individual counties opt into, not a system the state mandates or runs itself, so its coverage grows over time but has never reached all 93 counties. A researcher who assumes the portal is comprehensive can walk away thinking a county has no recorded documents for a name or parcel when the real explanation is that the county simply hasn't joined the shared platform.
The same fragmentation shows up in how the recording office itself is structured. Nebraska's smallest counties merge the Register of Deeds function into the County Clerk's office rather than keeping it as its own elected position. Neither quirk changes how the underlying chain of title works, but both affect where a researcher actually has to go to find a record.
Deed Solicitation Mailers and Property Fraud Alerts
Nebraska homeowners, like homeowners nationwide, are a target for a well-documented mail scam: a company sends an official-looking solicitation offering to provide a "certified copy of your deed" or a "property assessment profile" for a fee that commonly runs $80 to $95. These mailers are designed to look like government correspondence, using words like "official" and "certified" and including real details, such as the property address, parcel number, and purchase date, pulled straight from public records to appear legitimate. A disclaimer buried in fine print usually admits the mailer isn't a government bill and there's no obligation to pay.

The actual document costs a fraction of that. A certified copy of a recorded Nebraska deed runs $1.50 per page under Neb. Rev. Stat. Section 33-109, and most homeowners already received their original deed for free at closing, meaning there's usually no need to buy a replacement at all. If a mailer like this arrives, the safest response is to disregard it, avoid paying, and report it to the Nebraska Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division or the FTC at ftc.gov/complaint.
A related but more serious risk is deed or title fraud, where a criminal files a forged deed to fraudulently transfer or borrow against someone else's property. Several Nebraska counties offer a free defense: a property-fraud alert service that emails a subscriber, often with a link to the recorded document image, the moment any instrument is recorded under their registered name. Buffalo County, Platte County, and Saunders County all run a "Property Fraud Alert" sign-up, and Sarpy County offers the same protection under the local name "Fraud Notify." Signing up with your county's Register of Deeds, where available, is a low-effort way to catch a fraudulent filing early.
None of this replaces a professional title search. A do-it-yourself lookup through Nebraska Deeds Online or a county assessor's site is useful for general research or fraud monitoring, but it is not the same as the specialized search a licensed title company or closing attorney performs before a real estate purchase, which cross-references deeds, mortgages, court judgments, and probate records and is typically paired with title insurance. State insurance regulators cite estimates that roughly one in four residential transactions has a title issue, exactly the kind of problem a full professional search is built to catch.
Frequently asked questions
Disclaimer
This article provides general legal and public-records information about property records in Nebraska. It was last verified on 2026-07-16 and has not yet been reviewed by a licensed attorney. It is not legal advice and is not a substitute for a licensed title company's professional title search or title insurance before a real estate purchase or closing. County office names, fees, and online tools change over time; confirm current details with the relevant Nebraska Register of Deeds or County Assessor before relying on them. For advice about a specific property, transaction, or fraud concern, consult a Nebraska-licensed attorney or a licensed title company.

Last updated: 2026-07-16. Figures and program details reflect their in-force version as of 2026-07-16.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there one statewide property records search for Nebraska?
Not quite. Nebraska Deeds Online functions as a shared search covering most, but not literally all, of the state's 93 counties. Check the site's participation map before assuming a county is included; non-participating counties must be searched directly through that county's Register of Deeds.
How much does a certified copy of a Nebraska deed cost?
$1.50 per page under Neb. Rev. Stat. Section 33-109, plus the office's standard photocopy fee. This rate applies consistently across Nebraska's counties.
What's the difference between the Register of Deeds and the County Assessor in Nebraska?
The Register of Deeds is the office of official record for recorded instruments like deeds and mortgages, and is where you get a certified copy. The County Assessor values property for tax purposes and usually runs the faster free owner-name lookup tool most people actually want.
How do I find out who owns a specific property in Nebraska for free?
Start with the county assessor's parcel search, linked through the Nebraska Department of Revenue's statewide assessor directory, searching by address, owner name, or parcel number. For deed history, check Nebraska Deeds Online if your county participates.
Is Nebraska Deeds Online free to use?
Yes for participating counties. Instrument-level index information is free, and document images are generally free for records scanned from February 1, 2005 forward, with some counties covering an earlier range.
What if my Nebraska county isn't on Nebraska Deeds Online?
You'll need to contact that county's Register of Deeds directly, by phone, in person, or by mailed request, since the shared portal only covers participating counties.
I received a letter offering to sell me a certified copy of my deed for around $89. Is that legitimate?
It's almost certainly a solicitation scam, not a government notice. A certified copy from the actual Register of Deeds costs $1.50 per page in Nebraska. Disregard the mailer, don't pay, and consider reporting it to the Nebraska Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division or the FTC.
Sources and References
- Nebraska Deeds Online, statewide participating-county deed search portal(nebraskadeedsonline.us)
- Nebraska Department of Revenue, Property Assessment Division, County Assessors and Parcel Search directory(revenue.nebraska.gov).gov
- Nebraska Revised Statute Section 33-109 (recording and certified-copy fees)(nebraskalegislature.gov).gov
- Lancaster County, Nebraska, Maps/GIS Services parcel search(lancaster.ne.gov).gov
- Sarpy County, Nebraska, Property Fraud Alert Service(sarpy.gov).gov
- Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute, Wex definition of "deed"(law.cornell.edu)
- FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center, Public Service Announcement on parcel owner impersonation fraud(ic3.gov).gov
- North Carolina Department of Insurance, consumer guide to title insurance(ncdoi.gov).gov